Platform for enabling sponsors to sponsor functions of a computing device

ABSTRACT

Systems, methods, and computer-readable media are described for sponsoring functions of computing devices associated with users. A sponsor may define a sponsorship that includes rules for sponsoring certain functions available to a user via a computing device. The execution of the functions may be facilitated, in some instances, by a service provider that may also specify rules and policies that control the functions. As such, when the user executes one or more of the sponsored functions by way of the computing device, instead of charging the associated cost to the user, the service provider may charge the cost to the sponsor based on the associated rules and policies.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is related by subject matter to that which is disclosedin the following commonly assigned application: U.S. patent applicationSer. No. 13/916,997, entitled “PLATFORM FOR ENABLING SPONSORED FUNCTIONSOF A COMPUTING DEVICE,” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/917,020,entitled “PLATFORM FOR ENABLING USERS TO SIGN UP FOR SPONSORED FUNCTIONSON COMPUTING DEVICES,” all filed on Jun. 13, 2013, the entirety of eachapplication is hereby incorporated by reference herein.

BACKGROUND

Personal electronic devices have become staple items of everyday life.They provide a wide spectrum of functionalities of which users takeadvantage. Coupled with connectivity, such as the ability to access apublic network (e.g., Internet), a wireless network, or the like, thepersonal electronic devices have become essential to communicationsbetween the users.

With the ever increasing availability and bandwidth of connectivity, thepersonal electronic devices allow the users to be connected at almostall times. From basic voice functionality using, e.g., a cell phone, tomore advanced data functionality using, e.g., a smartphone or a tablet,the users can communicate with each other, conduct e-commerce andm-commerce, surf the Internet, stream content, or the like on a 24/7basis.

This connectivity, however, comes with a cost. Service providerstypically charge users for using their networks based on, for example,the airtime (e.g., voice minutes) or the size of the data (e.g.,megabytes or gigabytes of data) that is used. Various charging modelsare available and include pre-paid and post-paid models. In the pre-paidmodel, a user pre-pays for an amount of voice/data that he or she canuse over the network of a service provider before actually using thevoice/data functionalities. In comparison, in the post-paid model, theservice provider charges the user for the amount of voice/data that heor she actually used in a certain billing cycle.

The various charging models may limit the functionalities of thepersonal electronic devices when connected to the network of the serviceprovider. For example, in the pre-paid model, once the amount ofvoice/data is used, the user may no longer be able to use his or herpersonal electronic device for additional voice/data functionalitiesthat require use of the network. Similarly, in the post-paid model, theservice provider and/or the user may impose a cap on the amount ofvoice/data that can be used in the billing cycle. Once the cap isreached, the corresponding functionalities of the personal electronicdevice may be disabled. Further, in other situations, the user may havesigned up for only a subset of available functionalities (e.g., voiceservices). In this situation, the user may not be able to use thepersonal electronic device to perform functions for which he or she wasnot signed up (e.g., exchange data over the network).

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Throughout the drawings, reference numbers may be re-used to indicatecorrespondence between referenced elements. The drawings are provided toillustrate example embodiments described herein and are not intended tolimit the scope of the disclosure.

FIG. 1 illustrates an example operating environment for providingsponsored content and connectivity, according to embodiments;

FIG. 2 illustrates an example computing system that may be used in theexample operating environment, according to embodiments;

FIG. 3 illustrates an example block diagram for initiating andpermitting a service, according to embodiments;

FIG. 4 illustrates an example block diagram for initiating andpermitting a data session, according to embodiments;

FIG. 5 illustrates an example block diagram for providing sponsoredcontent and connectivity, according to embodiments;

FIGS. 6A, 6B, and 6C illustrate an example interface for signing up tosponsored content and connectivity, according to embodiments;

FIG. 7 illustrates an example interface for setting up sponsored contentand connectivity, according to embodiments; and

FIG. 8 illustrates an example procedure for providing sponsored contentand connectivity, according to embodiments.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS

As noted above, the various charging models applied by the serviceprovider may limit the functionalities of the personal electronicdevices. The techniques described herein allow the functionalities to beextended to the users regardless of the charging models and theirassociated limits. More particularly, the techniques involve an entitythat sponsors functionalities and/or services (e.g., connectivity,airtime minutes, data bandwidth, data size, content, rate of datatransmission, data speed including data throttling options oralternatives, device cost, ownership cost, operation cost, etc.) onbehalf of the users.

The entity may be referenced herein below as a “sponsor” and typicallyincludes a user of a service of the service provider for sponsoring thefunctionalities. The service provider may charge the sponsor a fee forusing the service and/or fees corresponding to charges for the sponsoredfunctionalities as used by the users. For clarity purposes, the usersthat use the functionalities by way of the personal electronic devicesover the network may be referenced herein below as “subscribers.” Asubscriber typically has an arrangement with the service provider (e.g.,a subscription to various services provided by the service provider) bywhich the subscriber uses the network of the service provider and bywhich the service provider applies a charging model(s) to users of thenetwork. As further described below, the service provider may not chargethe subscriber for the use of the network when such a use is sponsoredbut may charge the sponsor instead. The service provider may be acompany that provides network-based services and may include, forexample, a network operator, a network service provider, an internetservice provider, a telecommunications service provider, a wirelessservice provider, a mobile virtual network operator, a carrier provider,a cloud service provider, or the like.

The sponsor may not be related to the subscriber except by way of asponsorship for which the subscriber has signed-up (e.g., the subscriberagrees to and accepts the terms and conditions of a specific sponsorshipoffered by the service provider and paid for by the sponsor). Also, thesponsor in some cases may be a subscriber (e.g., a user or an entitythat has an arrangement with the service provider for using thenetwork). Further, a sponsor may sponsor functionalities and services ofother sponsors. In typical situations, the sponsor may be any or acombination of a product company, a media company, an advertiser, agovernment office or entity, a movie studio, or any entity that aims tosell a product or a service or to get a message or offer to thesubscribers.

Further detail about sponsoring the functionalities is provided herein.It should be appreciated that the subject matter presented herein may beimplemented as a computer process, a computer-controlled apparatus, acomputing system, or an article of manufacture, such as acomputer-readable storage medium. While the subject matter describedherein is presented in the general context of program modules thatexecute on one or more computing devices, those skilled in the art willrecognize that other implementations may be performed in combinationwith other types of program modules. Generally, program modules includeroutines, programs, components, data structures, and other types ofstructures that perform particular tasks or implement particularabstract data types.

Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that the subject matterdescribed herein may be practiced on or in conjunction with othercomputer system configurations beyond those described herein, includingmultiprocessor systems, microprocessor-based or programmable consumerelectronics, minicomputers, mainframe computers, handheld computers,desktop or other computers, personal digital assistants, e-readers,cellular telephone devices, smartphones, tablets, wireless phones,pagers, electronic organizers, special-purposed hardware devices,database servers, network storage devices, network appliances, othernetwork devices, and various other consumer products that includeappropriate communication capabilities. The embodiments described hereinmay also be practiced in distributed computing environments, where tasksare performed by remote processing devices that are linked through acommunications network. In a distributed computing environment, programmodules may be located in both local and remote memory storage devices.

FIG. 1 illustrates an example of a suitable operating environment 100for sponsoring the functionalities. As illustrated, the operatingenvironment 100 includes various computing systems and componentsassociated with the subscribers (shown as a subscriber 114), the serviceproviders (shown as a service provider 124), the sponsors (shown as asponsor 134), and third parties (shown as a third party 144). In theinterest of clarity of explanation, FIG. 1 is described with respect toa single subscriber, a single service provider, a single sponsor, asingle third party, and their associated computing devices. However, thedescribed techniques can also be used in connection with a plurality ofsubscribers, service providers, sponsors, and/or third parties.

The computing systems and components of FIG. 1 can be configured suchthat the sponsor 134 can set up a sponsorship, the subscriber 114 cansign up for the sponsorship, and the service provider 124 can enforcethe sponsorship. The process for setting up, signing up for, andenforcing the sponsorship can be automated and can be configured toallow participants (e.g., the subscriber 114, the service provider 124,and the sponsor 134) to dynamically and autonomously execute theirrespective portions of the process. In other words, the sponsor 134 candynamically set up and update the sponsorship without input from thesubscriber 114 or the service provider 124. Likewise, the subscriber 114can dynamically sign up and update the sign-up to the sponsorshipwithout input from the sponsor 134 or the service provider 124. Also,the service provider 124 can dynamically enforce and update theenforcement of the sponsorship without input from the subscriber 114 orthe sponsor 134.

As explained herein above, the sponsorship is provided in associationwith services of the service provider 124. These services may include,for example, facilitating an interaction between the subscriber 114 andthe third party 144. The subscriber 114 may use a subscriber device 110to interact with a third party device 140 associated with the thirdparty 144. This interaction includes, for example, communicating withthe third party 144 by way of the subscriber device 110 and the thirdparty device 140 over a network core 120 of the service provider 124 andnetworks 150 and 170 that may or may not be associated with the serviceprovider 124.

The third party 144 may be any user that the subscriber 114 interactswith. For example, it may be another subscriber to the services of theservice provider 124 or a subscriber to another service provider. Toillustrate, the subscriber device 110 and the third party device 140 maybe wireless phones used to place calls or exchange data (e.g., textmessages, picture messages, or any other messages that use a messagingplatform that may be developed in the future) between the subscriber 114and the third party 144. In another example, the third party 144 neednot be a subscriber but, instead, may be a company or an organizationthat provides network-based services. In this case, the third partydevice 140 may be a server or any other network-based computing systemthat, for example, hosts a website or provides a web-based application(e.g., content streaming) accessible to the subscriber device 110.

The network core 120 may include the computing and networkinfrastructure that is operated by the service provider 124 to provideservices to its subscribers such as a cellular network, a telephonynetwork, a fiber-optic network, or combinations thereof. This networkcore may be configured to authenticate the subscriber 114 and to provideservices to the subscriber device 110. For example, it may be configuredto route the communication to and from the subscriber device 110 and tocharge for uses of the services. Further detail about the network core120 is described in FIGS. 3 and 4.

In comparison, the networks 150 and 170 may or may not be operated bythe service provider 124. They include a communications network of anytype that is suitable for providing communications between thesubscriber device 110 and the third party device 140 and may include acombination of discrete networks, which may use different technologies.For example, the networks 150 and 170 can include a radio access network(RAN), a WiFi/broadband network, a local area network (LAN), a wide areanetwork (WAN), or combinations thereof. In an example embodiment, theWiFi/broadband network includes the Internet and any networks adapted tocommunicate with the Internet.

In association with the interaction between the subscriber device 110and the third party device 140 by way of the network core 120, theservice provider 124 may charge the subscriber 114 for the servicesprovided. These services include, for example, voice and datafunctionalities initiated at the subscriber device 110 and/or the thirdparty device 140 and facilitated by the network core 120. To enable thecharging, the service provider 124 may associate the subscriber 114 witha subscription. This subscription can be managed at the network core120, may include, for example, a charging model (e.g., pre-paid,post-paid, etc.), and may track the subscriber device 110's uses of thenetwork core 120's services. Further detail about the subscription isdescribed in FIG. 5.

In addition to the network core 120, the service provider may operate anexchange platform 122. This exchange platform may be a standalonecomputing system (e.g., a server) that interfaces with the network core120 or may be integrated with components of the network core 120 (e.g.,its functionalities are implemented as hardware modules, softwaremodules, or a combination thereof that are integrated with the networkcore 120).

In an example, the exchange platform 122 may provide an interface to thesubscriber 114 for retrieving and updating information regarding thesubscription. The subscriber 114 can access the interface using thesubscriber device 110 or another computing device (e.g., a desktopcomputer) over the network 150. This access to the interface need notbut can be routed through the network core 120. The interface may allowthe subscriber 114 to get information about his or her uses of theservices of the service provider 124, such as the amount of airtimeminutes and data used, the charges (e.g., a bill within a cyclingperiod), or the like. The interface may also allow the subscriber 114 topay for the charges, to update the subscription (e.g., adding afunctionality such as data connectivity if the subscriber 114 was notsigned up for data services), or the like.

Furthermore, the exchange platform 122 may be configured to allow thesponsor 134 to set up the sponsorship, the subscriber 114 to sign up forthe sponsorship, and the service provider 124 to enforce thesponsorship. For example, the exchange platform 122 may provide aninterface that allows the sponsor 134 to define various aspects of thesponsorship. The sponsor 134 may operate a sponsor device 130 to accessthe interface over a network 160. The network 160 may include componentssimilar to the components of the networks 150 and 170. This access tothe interface need not but may also be by way of the network core 120when, for instance, the sponsor 134 is a subscriber to services of theservice provider 124.

Upon accessing the interface, the sponsor 134 can define, for example, atype of the sponsorship. The sponsorship type can include any or acombination of sponsored functionalities or services, such as sponsoredconnectivity and sponsored content. Sponsored connectivity may involvesponsoring the interaction of the subscriber 114 with the third party144 by way of the network core 120 (e.g., paying for charges incurred bythe subscriber 134 for using the services of the service provider 124 tocommunicate with the third party 144). This includes, for instance, thesponsor 134 assuming charges on behalf of the subscriber 114 for airtimeand data usages for interacting with the third party 144. In comparison,sponsored content may involve sponsoring the content associated with theinteraction (e.g., paying for charges incurred by the subscriber 134 forusing the content). This includes, for instance, the sponsor 134assuming charges on behalf of the subscriber 114 for the cost of thecontent (e.g., cost associated with a license to use the content, anaccess to a selected web site, a download of an application, a downloador upload a file, etc.) when the subscriber 114 transmits to or receivesthe content from the third party 144.

In addition to the described sponsored connectivity and content, thesponsor 134 can define other types of sponsorships. For example, thesponsorship may involve sponsoring data bandwidth (e.g., a rate of datatransmission experienced by the subscriber 114 on the subscriber device110), data size (e.g., an amount of data that the subscriber 114 mayupload or download over the network core 120), service upgrade (e.g.,the subscriber 114 signs-up for a service provided by the serviceprovider 124 and the sponsorship adds features, capabilities, functions,or the like to the service), or device cost (e.g., the cost ofpurchasing, owning, operating, etc. the subscriber device 110 may besubsidized or covered using the sponsorship), to name a few. In anexample, if the subscriber 114 signs up for third generation (3G)cellular services of the service provider 124, the sponsorship mayupgrade this 3G service to fourth generation (4G) services that are alsosupported by the service provider 124. In another example, instead ofpaying for the subscriber device 110 when the subscriber 114 signs up tothe service(s) of the service provider 114, if the subscriber 114,signs-up for the sponsorship, the subscriber 114 need not pay for thesubscriber device 110 or may need to pay for it at a discounted rate. Inthis example, the sponsor 134 would pay for the subscriber device 110 orfor the cost of the discount. Although the examples used herein maydescribe uses of sponsored connectivity and sponsored content, thedescription of these examples similarly applies to the other types ofsponsorships unrelated to those described herein and are not repeatedfor clarity purpose.

Further, the sponsor 134 can define various parameters that thesponsorships may or may not be conditioned on. These parameters mayinclude demographics of the subscriber 114, the location of thesubscriber device 110, predefined thresholds set by the service provider124, or the like. For example, a data bandwidth sponsorship may beapplicable (e.g., goes into effect and covers the cost incurred by thesubscriber 114) when the subscriber 114's data usage passes a threshold.To illustrate, if the service provider 124 throttles down the data speedof the subscriber 114 (e.g., the data speed is changed from one Gbps to256 Mbps) when the amount of data that he or she uses within a timeframe(e.g., a billing cycle) reaches a certain threshold (e.g., two gigabyteswithin a month cycle), this sponsorship may become applicable and raisesthe data speed to its pre-existing level (e.g., the data speed before itwas throttled down), a similar level, or even a higher level, such thatthe subscriber 114's overall experience of the data speed issubstantially unaltered or improved. One skilled in the art willappreciate that various other parameters may be implemented. Forexample, the sponsorship may be conditioned on the subscriber 114 takingan opinion poll or may be bundled with the subscriber 114 signing up foranother service of the service provider 124 or another sponsorshipoffered by the sponsor 134 or made available by the service provider124.

In addition to defining the type of the sponsorship and conditioningparameters, if any, the interface may allow the sponsor 144 to definerules associated therewith. These rules may describe the when (e.g.,time frame when the sponsorship may be available), what (e.g., whetherthe sponsorship will fully or partially cover the charges incurred bythe subscriber 114, the sponsored functionalities, etc.), how (e.g., theinformation required from the subscriber 114 to sign up for thesponsorship), who (e.g., the subscribers of the service provider 124that the sponsorship is available to), where (e.g., the sponsorship maybe available at a certain location or within a certain geographic area),and other conditions (e.g., the sponsorship may be available based up oncertain characteristics of the subscriber as established by the sponsorand agreed to by the subscriber) associated with applying thesponsorship to cover the costs incurred by the subscriber. 114. Further,the rules may be static (e.g., the rule does not change based on thelocation for the subscriber device 110) or dynamic (e.g., the ruleschange over time or be based on the location of the subscriber device110, or may dynamically apply other defined rules). Example of theserules include sponsoring connectivity and/or content based on time ofday, date, location, certain uniform resource locators (URLs) or typesof content, file protocols, etc. Further details about the sponsorshipand the interface are described in FIGS. 5 and 7.

Once the sponsor 134 sets up the sponsorship, the subscriber 114 cansign up for it by way of the exchange platform 122. For example, theexchange platform may also provide an interface to the subscriber 114such that he or she may use the subscriber device 110 or anothercomputing device to access information about the sponsorship. Uponaccessing the interface, the subscriber 114 may search for sponsorships,look for types and/or rules of sponsorships, sign up for a number ofsponsorships, and agree to provide information required by thecorresponding rules. Further detail about this interface is described inFIGS. 5 and 6A-6C. Briefly, the subscriber 114 may opt-in to allsponsorships available through the exchange platform, may selectspecific sponsorships, may sign-up for a sponsorship up-front (e.g.,when signing up for a service of the service provider 124 or purchasinga subscriber device therefrom, the subscriber 114 may agree tosponsorships associated with the service and/or device), or may agree toaccept a sponsorship automatically provided or pushed to him or herbased on a certain condition.

To illustrate, the service provider 124 may make an offer for a serviceto the market place that includes a pre-existing sponsorship or set ofsponsorships, to which the subscriber 114 may agree when he or sheaccepts the service conditions associated with the subscription to theservice; this would mean that the sponsorships occur automatically fromthe standpoint of the subscriber 114, who does not have to take actionin order to accept and benefit from the sponsorships. For example, whenthe subscriber 114 signs-up for the service offered by the serviceprovider 124, the subscriber may agree that whenever he or she enters oris within an area or a location, such as a store, a shopping mall, abuilding, a park, an airplane cabin, etc., then the service isautomatically sponsored by a particular sponsorship offered from thesponsor 134. In this manner, the subscriber 114 need not take anyadditional steps to benefit from the particular sponsorship, beyondbeing in the area and using the service via the subscriber device 110.Instead, the particular sponsorship may be automatically applied to hisor her use of the service.

Similarly, the service provider 124 may offer a “CompanyABC phone” rateplan or subscription, under which all the data connectivity is paid forby CompanyABC (e.g., CompanyABC is an example of the sponsor 134) and,therefore, is free to the subscriber 110 whenever he or she is in astore of CompanyABC. Similarly, a service may be partly or fully paidfor by a sponsor in exchange for the subscriber agreeing to view or hearadvertising from that sponsor. In a further example, the serviceprovider 124 may offer a “CompanyABC plan” where all data connectivityto the CompanyABC.com website and all of its related URLs may be paidfor by CompanyABC and, thus, may be free to the subscriber 114. In theseexamples, once the subscriber 114 signs up for CompanyABC phone rateplan or CompanyABC plan, subscriber 114 need not take further action tosign-up for the sponsorship. Also, in these examples, CompanyABC maybenefit from additional traffic that the sponsorship may bring (e.g.,the subscriber 114 physically visiting the store or virtually visitingthe website).

Further, the exchange platform 122 may also alert the subscriber 114 ofnew, existing, or expiring sponsorships. For example, the exchangeplatform may send a notification message to the subscriber device 110 orto an electronic address of the subscriber 114 describing any of thesesponsorships.

The exchange platform 122 may also allow the service provider 124 todefine rules for applying the sponsorship. For example, the serviceprovider 124 may describe conditions for when charges incurred by thesubscriber 114 can be covered by the sponsor 134 under the sponsorship.This may involve a description of what subscribers of the serviceprovider 124 to whom the sponsorship may be made available. Also, in apre-paid charging model, the service provider 124 may allow thesponsorship to cover the charges only when the subscriber 114 hasexhausted the amount of voice and data available in the subscription.Similarly, in a post-paid charging model, the service provider 124 mayallow the sponsorship to cover the charges only when a cap that limitsthe amount of voice and data that can be used in a billing cycle isreached.

The exchange platform 122 may also include a decision module, anenforcement module, or a combination thereof configured to decidewhether the sponsorship is applicable and to automatically apply thesponsorship to the charges incurred by the subscriber 114 based on therules defined by the sponsor 134 and the service provider 124. In thisway, the exchange platform 122 enables and mediates, for example,connectivity and/or delivery of content to the subscriber device 110based on the sponsorship. Further detail about this feature of theexchange platform 122 is described in FIGS. 3-5.

To illustrate some of the above features of the exchange platform 122,the following scenarios are described. In a first scenario, the sponsor134 may, using the interface to the exchange platform 122, may specifythat “all subscribers of carrier X get free access specifically to theCompanyABC.com website and all of its related URLs whenever they areconnected to the carrier's network, even if a subscriber: (a) has nodata plan, or (b) has a data plan but has run out of data at the time heor she seeks to access CompanyABC.com.” Under this sponsorship, theexchange platform 122 allows the subscriber 114 to access theCompanyABC.com website, while the cost of the data associated with suchaccess by way of the network core 120 is charged to the sponsor 134,even when the subscriber 114 has not signed up for data services or hasrun out of usable data services.

In another scenario, the sponsor 134 may specify that “all subscribersof carrier get free movies from the CompanyABC.com website but the costassociated with data usage for streaming the movies is not sponsored.”Under this sponsorship, while the exchange platform 122 allows thesubscriber 114 to receive a free movie, it requires that he or she paysfor the data usage when the movie is streamed from the CompanyABC.comwebsite to the subscriber device 110.

In yet another example, the sponsor 134 can specify that “allsubscribers of carrier Y get free connectivity to access theCompanyABC.com website and free content downloaded from theCompanyABC.com website any time the subscribers are within one mile of aCompany123 store.” Under this sponsorship, the exchange platform 122allows the subscriber 114 to receive sponsored connectivity and contentbased on a location of the subscriber device 110.

A further scenario may involve the sponsor 134 specifying, with respectto the subscriber 114 or a group of subscribers: “If you (thesubscriber) agree to provide me (the sponsor) with your locations, Iwill sponsor all (or selected types) of your data connectivity. If youprovide me with additional data about you (e.g., age), I will sponsorselected content.” Under this sponsorship, the exchange platform 122allows the subscriber 114 to provide certain information to the sponsor134 in return for a certain type of sponsorship. These scenarios aremerely illustrative and one skilled in the art will appreciate thatvarious other features and services of the exchange platform 122 may beimplemented.

Turning to FIG. 2, this figure shows an example computer architecture ofa computing device 200 capable of executing the above-describedfeatures. The subscriber device 110, the network core 120, the exchangeplatform 122, the sponsor device 130, and/or the third party device 140of FIG. 1 may implement some or all elements of the computing device200. More particularly, FIG. 2 illustrates an example of circuitry forthe computing device 200. As used herein, the term “circuitry” includeshardware components (e.g., microprocessors, application specificintegrated circuits, processors, etc.) configured using firmware andsoftware that implement the monitoring and detecting techniquesdescribed herein. For example, a processor can be configured byinstructions loaded from memory, e.g., random access memory (RAM),read-only memory (ROM), firmware, and/or mass storage, embodying logicoperable to configure the processor to perform the functionalitiesdisclosed herein.

FIG. 2 illustrates that the circuitry may at least include a processor202, a system memory 204, a storage device 206, input/output peripherals208, communication peripherals 210, and an interface bus 212. Theinterface bus 212 may be configured to communicate, transmit, andtransfer data, controls, and commands among the various components ofthe computing device 200. The system memory 204 and the storage device206 may comprise computer readable storage media, such as RAM, ROM,electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM),hard-drives, CD-ROMs, optical storage devices, magnetic storage devices,electronic non-volatile computer storage, for example Flash® memory, andother tangible storage media. Any of such computer readable storagemediums can be configured to store instructions or program codesembodying aspects of the disclosure. The system memory 204 and thestorage device 206 may also comprise computer readable signal media. Acomputer readable signal medium may include a propagated data signalwith computer readable program code embodied therein. Such a propagatedsignal may take any of a variety of forms including, but not limited to,electromagnetic, optical, or any combination thereof. A computerreadable signal medium may be any computer readable medium that is not acomputer readable storage medium and that can communicate, propagate, ortransport a program for use in connection with the computing device 200.

Further, the system memory 204 may comprise an operation system andapplications. The processor 202 may be configured to execute the storedinstructions and can comprise, for example, a logical processing unit, amicroprocessor, a digital signal processor, and the like. The input andoutput peripherals 208 may include user interfaces such as a keyboard,screen, microphone, speaker, other input/output devices, and computingcomponents such as digital-to-analog and analog-to-digital converters,graphical processing units, serial ports, parallel ports, universalserial bus, signal generators, filters, signal processors,location-based modules, and the like. For example, the locationbased-module may process a signal from a satellite positioning system(e.g., global positioning system (GPS) satellite) to determine locationinformation of the computing device 200 (e.g., GPS coordinates).Likewise, the location-based module may process cellular or Wi-Fitriangulation signals to determine similar location information. Theinput/output peripherals may be connected to the processor 202 throughany of the ports coupled to the interface bus 212.

The user interfaces can also be configured to allow a user of thecomputing device 200 to interact within the operating environment 100 ofFIG. 1. For example, the computing device 200 may include instructionsthat, when executed, cause the computing device 200 to generate a userinterface that the user can use to provide input to the computing device200 and to receive an output from the computing device 200. This userinterface may be in the form of a graphical user interface that isrendered at the screen and that is coupled with audio transmitted on thespeaker and microphone and input received at the keyboard. In anembodiment, the user interface can be locally generated at the computingdevice 200. In another embodiment, the user interface may be hosted on aremote computing device and rendered at the computing device 200. Forexample, the remote computing device (e.g., a server) may generate theuser interface and may transmit information related thereto to thecomputing device 200 that, in turn, renders the user interface to theuser. The computing device 200 may, for example, execute a browser or anapplication that exposes an application program interface (API) at theremote computing device to access the user interface hosted on theremote computing device.

Finally, the communication peripherals 210 may be configured tofacilitate communication between the computing device 200 and othercomputing devices over a communications network and may include, forexample, a network interface controller, modem, variousmodulators/demodulators and encoders/decoders, wireless and wiredinterface cards, antenna, transmitters, receivers, and the like.

As described herein above, the network core 120 and the exchangeplatform 122 of FIG. 1 may implement some or all elements of thecomputing device 200 of FIG. 2 and may be integrated or may beimplemented as standalone computing and communication systems. FIGS. 3and 4 illustrate further example architectures for implementing thenetwork core 120 and the exchange platform 122. These figures areillustrative and one skilled in the art will appreciate that variousother architectures of the network core 120 and the exchange platform122 may be implemented.

Turning to FIG. 3, this figure illustrates an operating environment 300configured such that the network core 120 and the exchange platform 122service a call placed using the subscriber device 110. As illustrated,the network core 120 may include a base station 312, an originatingmobile switching center 314, a visitor location register 316, a homelocation register 318, and a carrier network 322. The network core 120may also include a service manager 320. In such a configuration, theexchange platform 122 may be integrated with the network core 120 by wayof the service manager 320 (e.g., the service manager 320 may beconfigured to implement the functionalities of the exchange platform122). Alternatively, the service manager 320 may be a standalonecomputing system that interfaces with the network core 120 and that isintegrated with the exchange platform 122. In yet another embodiment,the service manager 320 may be a standalone computing system thatinterfaces with the network core 120 and the exchange platform 122.

As illustrated in FIG. 3, the subscriber device 110 is utilized tooriginate a service, such as a call or message, using commonstandardized methods, e.g., as defined in IS-136 (a TDMA standard),IS-95 (a CDMA standard), LTE standard, etc. The subscriber device 110would first establish a connection with a base station 312, which wouldin turn connect to an originating mobile switching center (O-MSC) 314.Upon receiving the origination request for a service from the basestation 312, the O-MSC 314 would attempt to authenticate the subscriberdevice 110 by querying a visitor location register 316 and a homelocation register 318 to determine if the subscriber device 110 isregistered with the network core 120 and authorized for use on thatnetwork, collectively referred to as “validation.”

Upon successful validation, the O-MSC 314 would trigger the servicemanager 320, based on standardized methods, e.g., as defined in IS-41,IS-771, IS-826, etc. The service manager 320 would first authenticatethe subscriber 114 based on his or her mobile directory number (MDN)and/or mobile subscriber identification (MSID), or some other type ofidentifier, as a valid subscriber. If the subscriber 114 is not valid,the subscriber 114 will be notified through the subscriber device 110and the session will be terminated. If the subscriber 114 is valid, theservice manager 320 will then enforce the provisioned voice or datapolicies or rules associated with the subscription of the subscriber 114and sponsorships that the subscriber 114 may have selected. The policiesand rules associated with the subscription may define functionalrestrictions such as contact restrictions, time-of-day restrictions orallowed number list functions/blocked number list restrictions. If thesubscriber 114 fails any of these provisioned policies or rules, thesubscriber 114 will be notified and the session will be terminated.

If the session is allowed to progress, the service manager 320 will thenrate and charge the service transactions requested during that sessionbased on the subscription (e.g., pre-paid and post-paid chargingmodels), the sponsorships, and the rules that the service provider 124may have imposed on applying the sponsorships. Once the servicetransaction has been rated and charged, the service transaction ispermitted to continue. If the service transaction is a call, a download,a text message, or any other service that requires the subscriber device110 to be connected to another device (e.g., the third party device140), a connection would be established to the other device over thecarrier network 322, including a radio area network, and any applicablepublic network 324 (e.g., the network 170). This may include when, forexample, the other device is a mobile station such as a cell phone,routing the connection to a terminating mobile switching centerconnected to the mobile station.

Turning to FIG. 4, this figure illustrates an operating environment 400configured such that the network core 120 and the exchange platform 122service a data session originated using the subscriber device 110. Asillustrated, the network core 120 may include the base station 312 ofFIG. 3, an originating packet data serving node (O-PDSN) 425, anauthentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) server 427, a homeagent 426, and a carrier network 322. Also, as in FIG. 3, the networkcore 120 may integrate or interface with a service manager 320 that, inturn, may integrate or interface with the exchange platform 122.Additionally, the operating environment may include an enforcementmodule 428 and a decision module 429, each of which or both may beintegrated with the network core 120, the exchange platform 122, and/orthe service manager 320, or which may be a standalone computing systemthat interfaces with the network core 120, the exchange platform 122,and/or the service manager 320.

As in FIG. 3, the subscriber device 110 originates a session (data inthis case, but could also be voice as shown in FIG. 3) by establishing aconnection with the base station 312, which in turn connects to theO-PDSN 425. The O-PDSN 425 acts as a gateway by providing access to theInternet, intranets, and applications servers for the mobile subscriberdevice 110 and acts as a client for the home agent 426 and the AAAserver 427. Upon receipt of an origination request for a service fromthe base station 312, the O-PDSN 425 will attempt to validate therequest.

Validation involves first attempting to authenticate the subscriberdevice 110 by querying the AAA server 427 and the home agent 426 todetermine if the subscriber device 110 is authorized to perform therequested action within the carrier network 322. If the subscriberdevice 110 has been validated, the O-PDSN 425 will obtain an internetprotocol (IP) address for the data session and route the subscriberdevice 110 to the enforcement module 428.

The enforcement module 428 may be a logical element that can bephysically housed in another packet data serving node or a gatewaydevice, depending on the service request, such as a wireless applicationprotocol (WAP) gateway, instant messaging gateway, email gateway,multimedia messaging service gateway, etc. The enforcement module 428 isresponsible for enforcing a decision by the service manager 320 and/orthe decision module 429 to accept or reject the service request. Thedecision may be based on policies and rules managed and/or stored at theenforcement module 428, the service manager 320, the decision module429, and/or the exchange platform 122, depending on the configuration ofthe operating environment 400. The enforcement module 428 may operate inconjunction with the policy module 429, and depending on theconfiguration of the operating environment 400 possibly the servicemanager 320, to authenticate the subscriber 114 as a valid subscriber,based on his or her MDN and MSID, or some other type of identifier andto enforce the decision by either accepting or rejecting the servicerequest. The decision module 429 may also be a logical element that canbe physically housed in the service manager 320 or in another serveraccessible to either the service manager 320 or the enforcement module428. The decision module 429 may be configured to maintain or store alist of policies that have been established to control the features andfunctions of the subscriber device 110 and to decide, based on thosepolicies, to either accept or reject the service request.

The policies may be established part of the subscription of thesubscriber 114 to the services of the service provider 124 and may bealso associated with the rules of the sponsorships to control thefeatures and functions of the subscriber device 110. These policies maybe established by way of input received from the subscriber 114, theservice provider 124, and/or the sponsor 134 at the correspondinginterfaces provided by the exchange platform 122. They may include, forexample, filters that specify the content that can be exchanged (e.g.,downloaded, uploaded, streamed, etc.) with the subscriber device 110,the amount of data (e.g., in gigabytes increments) that can beexchanged, or the like.

For example, the service request might be initiated by the subscriberdevice 110, such as when the subscriber device 110 sends a request todownload some type of content, such as a game, a ringtone, a website, apicture message, a text message, etc. from the third party device 140.In other cases, the request might be initiated by another device (e.g.,the third party device 140) seeking to communicate with the subscriberdevice 110. For example, the subscriber 114 might have a text messagesent to her/him by a friend, but if a policy is in place that preventsthe user from receiving text messages at the time the message is sent,then the request to communicate with the subscriber 114 will be denied.Likewise, the subscriber 114's request may not have anything to do withmaking a call or downloading content, but rather just to use somefeature or function of the subscriber device 110, such as a game that isalready locally stored on the device. Even in this instance, thesubscriber device 110 would need to communicate with the enforcementmodule 428 to determine if a policy is in place that would prevent useof the feature or function for some reason, such as the wrong time ofthe day, the wrong day of the week, the game has been played in excessof some time limit set on the game, etc.

In situations where the subscriber 114 is not valid, the enforcementmodule 428 will notify the subscriber 114 through the subscriber device110 and take one of a number of different possible actions, such asterminating the session or transaction associated with the servicerequest, redirecting or rewriting the session or transaction, degradingthe session or transaction to a lower quality or class of service, etc.If the subscriber is valid, the enforcement module 428 will enforce theprovisioned policies for the subscriber 114.

As noted above, these policies can cover many different rules that applyto the features or functions of the subscriber device 110 based onrequests sent to or received from the subscriber device 110. Thesepolicies include those items noted above, but may also include manyother things related to the subscription of the subscriber, such ascharge balances, service state/status, provisioned services/features,user selected service controls, and other functions or functionalrestrictions.

If any of the provisioned policies fail (e.g., a restriction is met),the subscriber 114 is notified and the enforcement module 428 will takeone of number of different possible actions, such as terminating thesession or transaction, redirecting or rewriting the session ortransactions, degrading the session or transaction to a lower quality orclass of service, etc. When the requester is not the subscriber 114, itmay be preferable to notify the requester or notify both the requesterand the subscriber 114. For example, if someone attempted to call thesubscriber 114, or send an email, Instant Message, or text message tothe subscriber 114, and there was a policy in place that prevented thecall or communication, then it might be necessary to tell that someoneso they know why they cannot contact the subscriber 114 at that time. Itmay also be necessary to notify the subscriber 114 or an administratorso they know what happened as well. If all of the policies pass, thenthe session or transaction associated with the service request ispermitted to continue.

Turning to FIG. 5, this figure illustrates an example operatingenvironment 500 for setting up, signing up to, and applyingsponsorships. More particularly, the operating environment may implementsome or all elements of the components of FIGS. 1-4. As illustrated, theoperating environment 500 includes a plurality of network cores 520A,520B, . . . , 520L and an exchange platform 522, which may have similararchitectures as the network core 120 and the exchange platform 122,respectively. For example, each of the network cores may include one ormore radio area networks (shown as radio area network 514A, 514B, and514C in FIG. 5) and one or more carrier networks (shown as carriernetwork 516A, 516B, and 516N in FIG. 5). The radio area networks and thecarrier networks may implement some or all elements of the operatingenvironments 300 and 400 of FIGS. 3 and 4, respectively. Additionally,the plurality of network cores may be associated with same or differentservice providers and may be referred herein singularly as “network core520” or in the plural as “network cores 520.” Although FIG. 5illustrates a single exchange platform 522, a plurality of exchangeplatforms may be also associated with the plurality of network cores520. As such, there may be a one-to-one, a one-to-many, a many-to-one,or a many-to-many association between each network core and eachexchange platform.

In an embodiment, the network core 520 and the exchange platform 522 maybe integrated, and in another embodiment, the exchange platform 520 maybe hosted outside of the network core 520 and may interface therewithover a network. Independently of the embodiment, these components may beconfigured to facilitate a self-service set up of a sponsorship (e.g., asponsor need not receive input from a subscriber to set up asponsorship), a self-service sign-up to the sponsorship (e.g., thesubscriber need not receive input from the sponsor to sign up for thesponsorship), and an automatic application of the sponsorship (e.g., theservice provider seamlessly can enforce the rules and conditions of thesponsorship in a manner that is transparent to the sponsor and thesubscriber).

As illustrated in FIG. 5, the features of the network core 520 and theexchange platform 522 may be available to a plurality of sponsors andsubscribers associated with a plurality of sponsor devices 530A, 530B, .. . , 530M and subscriber devices 510A, 510B, . . . , 510N,respectively. The plurality of sponsor devices may be referred hereinsingularly as “sponsor device 530” or in the plural as “sponsor devices530.” Likewise, the plurality of subscriber devices may be referredherein singularly as “subscriber device 510” or in the plural as“subscriber devices 530.” Each of the subscriber devices 510 and of thesponsor devices 530 may be associated with one or more network cores 520and exchange platforms. For example, as shown in FIG. 5, subscriberdevices 510A and 510B may be associated with the network core 520A of afirst service provider while the subscriber device 510C may beassociated with the network core 520B of a second service provider.

To set up sponsorships, the exchange platform 522 may provide a secureweb portal 532 to the sponsor devices 530. Again, although a singlesecure web portal 532 is shown in FIG. 5, there may be a plurality ofsecure web portals that allow one or more sponsors to set up thesponsorships. The secure web portal 532 may interface with the exchangeplatform over a public network 540 (e.g., the Internet) as shown in FIG.5, or may be integrated with the exchange platform 522. The secure webportal 532 may provide interfaces to the sponsor devices 530 forreceiving information therefrom to define the various aspects of thesponsorships.

For example, each of the sponsors may be associated with an account atthe exchange platform 522. The accounts may store profiles andinformation related to the sponsors and may allow the sponsors and theservice providers to manage the sponsorships. In turn, the secure webportal 532 may authenticate and authorize a sponsor to access thecorresponding account by way of identifiers and credentials of thesponsor (e.g., a username and a password). Once authenticated andauthorized, the secure web portal may allow the sponsor to describe thefeatures of the sponsorship by way of the interface. For example, theinterface may allow the sponsor to search for subscribers, groups ofsubscribers, and/or other sponsors and to select to whom the sponsorshipmay be made available. The interface may also allow the sponsor todefine the rules of the sponsorship, such as whether the sponsorshipsponsors content and/or connectivity, the information, if any, requiredfrom the subscribers to sign up for the sponsorship, and conditions, ifany, for applying the sponsorship (e.g., time/location restrictions,content restrictions, partially or fully covering charges incurred bythe subscribers, etc.). Further detail of the interface is described inFIG. 7. These features of the sponsorship may be stored at the exchangeplatform 522 and may be associated with the account of the sponsor.

The secure web portal 532 may also allow the sponsors to access theiraccounts at any time such that they can dynamically update and edittheir sponsorships. Additionally, the secure web portal 532 may allowthe sponsors to fund or pay for the charges associated with thesponsorships by, for example, paying the service provider. These chargesmay be posted to the accounts of the sponsors and may be paid by creditcard, an automated clearing house (ACH) process, wire transfer, or otherforms of payment. Similarly, the charges may be post-paid to the serviceprovider such that they may be connected to a billing system whereby theservice provider periodically bills a sponsor for the sponsorships ithas created and funded. For example, an account of a sponsor may includecredits or units of value (e.g., virtual money, virtual funds, etc.)that may be applied to the charges. These units of values may beorganized in wallets along with rules that define how charges can beapplied to the wallets. Further detail about the wallets and the rulesis described herein below with regard to wallets of the subscribers. Thewallets and rules of the accounts have similar functionalities and, inthe interest of clarity of explanation, the description of thesefunctionalities is not repeated here.

The charges associated with a sponsorship may include the charges thatare incurred by the subscribers for using the services of the serviceproviders and that are sponsored by the sponsorship. Additionally, thecharges may include fees that the service providers may collect from thesponsor for providing the sponsorship. These two charges may bepresented to the sponsor as an aggregated total sum or as separate feesand may be billed together or separately within a same or a differentbilling cycle.

Once a sponsor sets up a sponsorship and subscribers sign up for it, theexchange platform 522 may populate or update the sponsor's account withinformation related to the status of the sponsorship. This informationincludes, in addition to the charges, summaries about the marketpenetration or success rate of the sponsorship—such as the total numberof subscribers that signed-up for it—the percentage of subscribers thatthis sponsorship was offered to but have not signed up for it yet, theusage frequency of the sponsorship by the subscribers, and any otherstatistical information that may be of interest to the sponsor. Theexchange platform 522 may also notify subscribers of sponsorships thatare created. For example, as soon as a sponsorship is created,periodically, at intervals of time, and/or upon request from asubscriber, the exchange platform 522 may provide information about thesponsorship. This information may include a description about thesponsorship, its types, its benefits, the conditions for it to apply,the steps needed to sign-up for it, its popularity (e.g., its marketpenetration or how may subscribers have signed for it), its rating(e.g., what other subscribers are saying about the sponsorship), andinformation about other subscribers (e.g., subscribers that may be knownto or friends of the subscriber) that have signed up for it, and othersummaries or information that may entice the subscriber to sign up forthe sponsorship. Similarly, the exchange platform 522 may providesimilar information about existing, expiring, or expired sponsorships tothe subscriber. Likewise, data associated with sponsorships andsubscribers to sponsorships could be generated and provided to thesponsor to gauge the effectiveness of certain sponsorships in attractingcertain types of subscribers, promoting certain types of behavior amongsubscribers, etc.

As such, by setting up the sponsorship, the sponsor may gain mind share(e.g., development of consumer awareness or popularity), may govern thecontent and/or connectivity sponsored by amount, type, time, location,or related rules, and may be able to trade content and/or connectivityfor subscriber information (e.g., location information, demographicinformation, etc.). Also, by accessing the exchange platform 522 by wayof the secure web portal 532, the sponsors can define the rules andpolicies of their sponsorships, identify the service providers that mayoffer the sponsorships to its subscribers, identify the subscribers ofeach service providers that the sponsorships may be made available to,and pay for the costs of the sponsored functions.

Similarly to the sponsors, the subscribers may be able to access andsign up for sponsorships by way of interfaces provided by a subscriberportal 512. Although FIG. 5 illustrates a single subscriber portal, aplurality of subscriber portals 512 may be used. Additionally, thesubscriber portal 512 may be integrated with the exchange platform 522or may interface therewith over a network, including for example thenetwork core 520. In an example, the subscriber portal 512 may be a webportal that authenticates and authorizes a subscriber to accessinformation stored at the exchange platform 522 based on, for example,the subscriber's MDN, MSID, username, password, or other identifiers andcredentials. In another example, a standalone application programexecuting on the subscriber device 510 may connect to an applicationprogramming interface (API) exposed by the subscriber portal 512 foraccessing the information.

As explained herein above, each subscriber may be associated with asubscription to services of the service provider. The subscription maybe fully or partially managed at the exchange platform 522. For example,the exchange platform 522 may record information related to the variousaspects of the subscription and may provide an interface to thesubscriber to access the information and edit or update portions of it.The subscriber may access his or her subscription by way of theinterfaces provided by the subscriber portal 512, may dynamically updatethe subscription (e.g., sign up for new services), and may associate asponsorship with the subscription (e.g., by opting-in, selecting,signing upfront, or accepting automatic push of the sponsorship).Further detail about the interfaces is described in FIGS. 6A-6C.

The subscription may include a plurality of features that specify thefunctionalities that the subscriber device 510 may be able to execute inassociation with the core network 520 (e.g., when connected to it) orindependently of the core network 520 (e.g., when a function of thesubscriber device 510 is initiated and its execution need not have aconnection to the core network 520, such as playing a game locally onthe subscriber device 510). For example, the subscription can includethe list of the services that the subscriber has subscribed to, a planthat the subscriber has signed up for (e.g., the amount of airtimeminutes and data that the subscriber may use within a billing cycle),limits on the plan (e.g., the plan may be shared with another subscriberdevice 510 and may include a definition of the amount of airtime minutesand data that each of the devices can use), or the like. In addition, itmay also include information related to the subscriber (e.g., his or herprofile, such as age, demographic, etc.) and history of the servicesprovided to the subscriber (e.g., previously purchased services,accepted sponsorships, billing history, etc.).

Further, charges associated with the services of the service providermay be applied to the subscription. The subscriber may pay for thesecharges by different forms of payments, such as by using a credit card.Additionally, the subscription may include an electronic account thatholds units of value that the subscriber can fund and from which thecharges can be paid. This electronic account may be also referred toherein as “a wallet,” whereas the units of value can be any credits(including virtual credits) that hold a value usable for paying chargesincurred, such as money, airtime minutes, a size of data, etc. Thesubscriber may associate a plurality of wallets with a singlesubscription. Additionally, the subscriber may associate a plurality ofwallets with the functionalities of a single subscriber device 510and/or a single wallet with a plurality of subscriber devices 510.

Rules specifying uses of the wallets may also be defined and associatedwith the subscription. These rules can identify the wallet(s) in thesubscription will pay for a function. For example, the subscriber canspecify that a first wallet is to be charged for voice services and asecond wallet to be charged for data services. Further, the subscribercan also specify that when the units of value in the first wallet areexhausted within a billing cycle, the voice services may be disabled,while the data services may still be enabled as long as the funds in thesecond wallet are sufficient to pay for the data services.Alternatively, the subscriber can specify that when the units of valuein the first wallet are exhausted, a portion of the remaining units ofvalue from the second wallet can be transferred to the first wallet orused to pay for the voice services without the transfer to the firstwallet. Likewise, the service provider may specify a rule by whichcharges are satisfied from a third wallet in the subscription when theunits of value in the first and second wallets are exhausted. Theserules are merely illustrative and one skilled in the art will appreciatethat the subscriber and the service provider may define other rules thatcontrol the use of the wallets (e.g., how charges may be collected fromthe units of value in the wallets).

These rules may also be used to allow or block a function of thesubscriber device 510 by, for example, enabling the function when thewallet(s) specified by the rules have sufficient funds to pay for it orotherwise disabling it. In addition to this type of functionalitycontrol, policies may be defined to also effectuate similar controls.These policies may be managed by a decision module and enforced by anenforcement module, each of which can be integrated with the exchangeplatform 522 similarly to the description of the the decision module 429and enforcement module 428 of FIG. 4.

These policies may define a list of restrictions that limit certain orall of the functions of the subscriber device 510. For example, thesubscriber may define a list of blocked contacts (e.g., othersubscribers or users associated with computing devices) that thesubscriber device 510 may not interact with. Similarly, time-based,location-based, content-based restrictions, or the like, may be defined.In a further example, the service provider may also set up filters thatcontrol, for example, the content that can be downloaded, uploaded, orstreamed to the subscriber device 510. These filters can includestandard content ratings (e.g., PG-13, R, etc.) and may be applied bythe service provider based on the age of the subscriber.

These policies may also interact or be associated with the rules suchthat the enforcement of the policies may also account for the rules. Forexample, the policies may define a list of functions that should beallowed regardless of the rules in such a way that the policies overridethe rules. As such, the subscriber can define a list of allowed contacts(e.g., emergency contacts) that can always be called regardless of thelimits that may be imposed on the calling function by way of the rulesassociated with the wallets.

As explained herein above, the various features of the subscription(e.g., the account, list of services, plan (voice/data), limits on theplan, profile, wallet, units of values, rules, policies, filters, etc.)may be stored and managed at the exchange platform 522. Further, thesubscription may be associated with the sponsorships to which thesubscriber signs up. For example, the subscription may be updated toinclude information about a selection of a sponsorship to which thesubscriber has signed up. Additionally, the exchange platform 522 mayfacilitate the execution of the functionalities of the subscription inconjunction with the functionalities of the sponsorship. For example,the exchange platform 522 may enforce the rules and policies defined inthe subscription in light of the rules and policies of the sponsorship.As such, when the subscriber executes a sponsored function on thesubscriber device 510, instead of charging the corresponding cost to awallet of the subscription as defined in the rules of the subscription,the cost may be charged to the account of the sponsor based on the rulesof the sponsorship. Further, which wallet in the account of the sponsormay be charged may depend on the rules of the account.

To illustrate, as an example, the subscriber may sign up for aconnectivity sponsorship that pays for all voice and data functions overthe service provider's network. Thus, when the subscriber places, forexample, a call, the associated cost is charged to the sponsor's accountrather than the subscription. Continuing with this example, the serviceprovider may also define a rule that limits the applicability of thissponsorship to situations where a limit on voice functions has beenreached (e.g., the airtime minutes in the subscription have been usedwithin a billing cycle). Thus, if the subscriber places a call when thesubscription has enough airtime minutes to cover the corresponding cost,this cost is charged against the subscription. However, when thesubscription lacks the sufficient airtime minutes, the exchange platform522 applies the sponsorship and charges the cost to the sponsor. In thisway, the service provider may be able to extend functionalities (e.g.,voice calling in this example) to the subscriber device 510 at noadditional cost to the subscriber. In other words, depending on thesubscription rules and the sponsorship rules, when the subscriber signsup for a sponsorship, the subscriber may be able to get freeconnectivity and free content, may be able to provide subscriberinformation to the sponsors (e.g., location-based information), and maybecome aware of sponsor-related products and services, and the like.

Additionally, the exchange platform 522 may be configured to provideinformation about the subscription, sponsorships, or combination thereofto the subscriber. This may include alerting the subscriber by way ofnotifications when a certain condition, associated with his or hersubscription, is met. For example, when the subscription includes a capon the amount of airtime minutes that the subscriber may use within abilling cycle and when the subscriber approaches that amount within acertain range or threshold, the exchange platform may send a message toa contact point of the subscriber (e.g., to his or her subscriberdevice, email address, etc.). Similarly, the information may includealerts about new, existing, expiring, or expired sponsorships and/oralerts about other subscribers known to the subscriber (e.g., his or herfriends, family members, circle of trust, etc.) signing-up to aparticular sponsorship. Further, the exchange platform 522 may allow thesubscriber to share information about sponsorships that he or she signedup for with other subscribers. For example, when the subscriber signs upfor a particular sponsorship, the exchange platform 522 mayautomatically generate a notification describing the sign up and theparticular sponsorship and provide such a notification to the othersubscribers. This can include, for example, the exchange platform 522posting the notification on a personal page of the subscriber hosted ona social media network. In another example, the information that theexchange platform exchange with the other subscribers can be comments orratings that the subscriber provided about the particular sponsorship.

As described herein above, the exchange platform 522 may recordinformation related to the subscriptions of the subscribers, theaccounts of the sponsors, the sponsorships of the sponsors, andselections of sponsorships under the subscriptions. As such, theexchange platform 522 can be configured as a control platform thatmanages and tracks links between the various features of thesubscriptions, characteristics of the subscribers, and/or the variousfeatures of the sponsorships.

The service provider may have access (e.g., administrative access) tothe exchange platform 522 for managing the various features thereofincluding management of the subscriptions, the accounts of the sponsors,the sponsorships, and the enforcement of the various rules and policies.For example, the service provider may manage a subscriber's subscriptionby facilitating the services that are listed in the subscription,providing billing services based on the wallets and the associatedrules, enforcing policies that may restrict certain functions or filtercertain content, or the like. Additionally, the service provider maydefine rules that may override or take priority over the rules of thesubscription. Examples of these rules include providing special offers,such as free trials, free calls, or facilitating emergency calls,regardless of the available units of value in the subscription.

The service provider may also manage the accounts of the sponsors byallowing the sponsors to define their sponsorships and by providing themwith billing services based on service fees and charges associated withthe sponsored activities of the subscribers. Further, the serviceprovider may also enforce rules associated with the accounts (e.g., whena sponsor has multiple wallets available to pay for the chargesincurred, the sponsor may define rules that specify what charges can beapplied to what wallets) and may also define additional rules andpolicies. For example, the service provider may limit the number ofsponsorships that a sponsor may provide and may prohibit certain typesof sponsorships (e.g., sponsored content to adult websites or asponsorship that collects certain subscriber-related information, suchas one that requires the subscriber to provide his or age, etc.).

Furthermore, the exchange platform 522 may allow the service provider tomanage the sponsorships. When a subscriber opts in to sponsorships, theservice provider may provide subscriber-related information to thesponsors allowing them to offer the sponsorships to the subscriber.Similarly, when the subscriber signs up for a sponsorship, the serviceprovider may ensure that the rules and policies of the sponsorship areapplied to the sponsored functions such that, for example, the costassociated with the sponsored functions are charged to the sponsor'saccount rather than the subscription. Additionally, the service providermay define rules and policies that override or take priority over therules and policies of a sponsorship.

For example, the service provider may specify that a sponsorship isapplicable to the subscription only after the units of value of thesubscription have been exhausted. In another example, the serviceprovider may specify whether a subscriber can sign up for multiplesponsorships and/or whether a sponsor can offer multiple sponsorships tosubscribers. This may also include whether an exclusive sponsorship maybe offered (e.g., an exclusive sponsorship may specify that a functionis sponsored by the sponsor provided that the subscriber accepts noother sponsorships for that function, or other functions, from othersponsors). In yet another example, the service provider can specify arule that, upon detection of a condition in the subscription (e.g.,units of value passing a threshold or being exhausted), generates andsends a notification (e.g., an electronic communication such as anautomated call, text message, email, etc.) to the subscriber informinghim or her of available sponsorships that can resolve the condition. Assuch, if the subscriber is not signed up for a connectivity sponsorshipand reaches a limit on the available airtime minutes, the serviceprovider can automatically notify him or her of a sponsorship that cancover voice calls that would otherwise exceed the limit.

The exchange platform 522 may also allow the service provider to provideinformation about the subscriptions, the subscribers, the sponsorships,the sponsors, the accounts of the sponsors, and/or the sign ups to thesponsorships to the various subscribers and sponsors. This can be in theform of announcements, notifications, alerts, or messaging functionsthat can tell subscribers about their subscriptions and when a newsponsorship has been created, what sponsorships exist at a given momentin time and/or at a given place, sponsorships that are about to expirewithin a certain timeframe (e.g., a week), or sponsorships that haveexpired. Likewise, the service provider can use the exchange platform togenerate messages to the sponsors informing them of the status of theirsponsorships, providing account-related information (e.g., balance due,when the balance passes a threshold, etc.), and describing sponsorshipsoffered by other sponsors (e.g., the service provider may describe toCompanyABC a sponsorship offered by CompanyXYZ).

Once the various aspects of the subscriptions, sponsorships, andapplicable rules and policies are defined, the exchange platform 522 mayseamlessly enforce these aspects against functions executed on thesubscriber device 510. This enforcement may be automatic and transparentto the sponsor and the subscriber. In other words, when the subscriberexecutes a sponsored function on the subscriber device 510 (e.g.,placing a call along with a selected connectivity sponsorship), theassociated charges are automatically deducted from the subscriptionand/or account of the sponsor based on the various rules and policiesand without additional input from the subscriber or the sponsor.

As described herein above, a service provider may register itssubscribers (e.g., the subscribers that have opted in to allowsponsorships) on the exchange platform 522 and may provide access toinformation related to the registered subscribers to the sponsors by wayof the secure web portal 532. This allows the sponsors to access thisinformation, to specify what functions they are willing to sponsor, forwhat subscribers, and to establish the rules of the sponsorships asfurther described in FIG. 7. Likewise, the service provider may or maynot allow the subscribers to access a subscriber section of the exchangeplatform 522. For example, the service provider may only provide anoption to opt in to sponsorships to a subscriber. In such a case, thesubscriber may not have access to sponsorship-related informationmanaged at the exchange platform 522 beyond a selection to opt in orout. In this case, when the subscriber opts in, the service provider mayapply all or certain available sponsorships based on its rules andpolicies. Alternatively, the service provider may allow the subscriberto search and select one or more specific sponsorships. In such a case,the subscriber can use the subscriber portal 512 to specify the terms ofthe sponsorship(s) he or she is willing to accept. For example, thesubscriber may agree to share location data with a sponsor in return fora sponsored connectivity. In another example, the subscriber can specifythat he or she is willing to accept sponsorship parameters accepted byanother subscriber (e.g., parameters already specified by/for a friendwho refers the subscriber to the exchange platform 522 via a textmessage, email or some other social networking action). Various aspectsof the actions available to a subscriber are illustrated in FIGS. 6A-6C.

Turning to FIG. 6A, this figure illustrates a basic layout of aninterface that a subscriber can use to sign up for a sponsorship.Various techniques may be used to do so, including opting-in to allsponsorships, selecting a specific number of sponsorships, signing-upfor a set of sponsorships upfront, accepting a set of sponsorships to beautomatically pushed with a service, or the like. Although FIG. 6Aillustrates these four techniques on a single graphical user interface,each technique and/or other techniques may be implemented on a separateinterface or may be implemented in any combination on the interface.

The opt-in feature allows the subscriber to accept the sponsorships thatthe service provider and/or the sponsors may offer him or herindependently of the functions that are sponsored. When the opt-infeature is selected (e.g., by clicking on the corresponding radial box),the service provider may share subscriber-related information withsponsors and may also associate the subscriber's subscription with thesponsorships that the sponsors have already made available to itssubscribers. Additionally, if a sponsor only offers a sponsorship tospecific subscribers, this sponsor may use the subscriber-relatedinformation to decide whether to make such a sponsorship available tothe subscriber.

The “select sponsorships based on my criteria” feature shown in FIG. 6Amay allow the subscriber to select specific sponsorships as furtherillustrated in FIGS. 6B and 6C. For example, this feature allows thesubscriber to search and select sponsorships based on criteria that heor she defines (e.g., the type of sponsorship, whether the sponsor canaccess location-based information of the subscriber device, etc.). Whenselected (e.g., by clicking on the corresponding radial box), thisfeature may also allow the service provider to share thesubscriber-related information with sponsors that meet the criteria ofthe subscriber. The opt-in feature and the select sponsorship featuremay work in conjunction. For example, both can be selected and when so,the selection of the “opt-in to sponsorships” feature allows the serviceprovider to share the subscriber-related information with the sponsorsand the selection of the “select sponsorships based on my criteria”allows the subscriber to select specific sponsorships that the sponsorsmay offer.

The “sign up upfront to a set of sponsorships” feature shown in FIG. 6Amay allow the subscriber to sign up for a particular set of sponsorshipswhen he or she initially subscribes to a service of the service providerto which the particular set of sponsorships may apply. This may alsoinclude situations where the subscriber receives or purchases asubscriber device to which the particular set of sponsorships may apply.As illustrated in FIG. 6A, the corresponding radial box may beautomatically selected (shown as a filled-out radial box) when thesubscriber subscribes to the service or obtains the subscriber device.The exchange platform may prohibit the subscriber from deselecting thisradial box for, except under certain conditions, to indicate his or herintent to remove the particular set of sponsorships. These conditionscan be, for example, time-based. In other words, after a certaintimeframe (e.g., a year) from subscribing to the service, the subscribermay not deselect the particular set of sponsorship. But, he or she maydo so thereafter. Another example of conditions can be cost-based. Inthis example, when the subscriber has spent a certain amount, units ofvalue, or funds on the service or other services of the serviceprovider, the subscriber may be able to deselect the particular set ofsponsorships. One skilled in the art will appreciate that otherconditions may also be used. The service provider and/or the sponsor(s)associated with the particular set of sponsorships may define theseconditions within their corresponding rules and policies.

The “accept a set of sponsorships to be automatically pushed” featureshown in FIG. 6A may allow the subscriber to accept certainsponsorship(s) such that they are automatically applied to the serviceof the service provider that the subscriber uses. For example, thesubscriber may be subscribed to a data plan offered by the serviceprovider. By selecting the radial box associated with this feature, thesubscriber may automatically benefit from sponsorships that may beoffered at any time. As such, if a sponsor offers a special datasponsorship during a holiday season or a promotional period of time,this special sponsorship may be automatically applied to thesubscriber's usage of the data plan during the holiday season or thepromotional period of time. In another example, the applicability of thesponsorships may be conditioned. As such, a sponsor may offer asponsorship that is only available within a certain location. If thesubscriber is within a certain geographical range of the location, thesponsorship may be pushed to the subscriber device (e.g., may becomeautomatically applicable to the service of the service provider used bythe subscriber while being located within the certain geographic range).Other conditions may also be defined and may include time-basedconditions, cost-based conditions, or the like. The service providerand/or the sponsor(s) associated with the sponsorships may define theseconditions within their corresponding rules and policies.

FIG. 6B illustrates another interface that the subscriber can use toselect specific sponsorships. As illustrated, this interface may includea search field in which the subscriber may type a string of charactersthat represent search criteria and that are used by a search engine ofthe exchange platform 522 to return results (e.g., list of sponsors)that meet the search criteria. The interface may also include multipletabbed windows that the subscriber can select. FIG. 6B shows only thewindow corresponding to the “Alphabetical Order” tab. However, similarwindows (e.g., windows with similar layouts and functionalities) arealso available under the tabs of “Category,” “Sponsorship Rule,” and“Friends.”

For example, the window of the “Category” tab may list the varioussponsors based on the types of sponsorships that they provide. As such,sponsors that sponsor connectivity may be listed together but in adifferent group than the ones that sponsor content. Likewise, the windowof the “Sponsorship Rule” tab may list the various sponsorships based onthe associated rules. For example, when two sponsorships have the samerule (e.g., the subscriber can get free connectivity if the subscriberprovides location-based information), the two sponsorships may be listedin the same group. Similarly, the window of the “Friends” tab may listthe sponsorships that the friends of the subscriber have selected. Forexample, when the subscriber opts in for sponsorships, he or she mayalso consent to providing the exchange platform 522 with access to hisor her address book. As such, the exchange platform 522 can retrieve thelist of contacts of the subscriber and can check these contacts againstother subscribers that have opted in and/or selected sponsorships. Theresult of such a check can be displayed in the “Friends” tab window in alist format that identifies the sponsorships and the contacts that haveselected them. Likewise, in this window of the “Friends tab” or inanother window, a selection box may be available to the subscriber forsharing the sponsorship(s) that he or she selects with a list ofcontacts. When checked, this selection box allows the exchange platform522 to generate a message describing the selection (e.g., identifyingthe subscriber, the selected sponsorship(s), etc.) and send, provide, ordisplay the message to the contacts on the list. For example, theexchange platform 522 may access a personal page of the subscriberhosted on a social networking platform by way of a corresponding API andpost the message on such a page. Similarly, the exchange platform 522may send the message by way of emails or any messaging platform toaddresses of the contacts. Additional tabs may also be defined in theinterface of FIG. 6B.

As shown under the window of the “Alphabetical Order” tab, a number ofsponsorship-related information may be displayed. For example, each ofthe sponsorships may be identified by its name, the sponsor, and therule. Other information may also be used such as any information thatmay help the subscriber in the selection of desired sponsorships. Thesponsorships may be listed by the alphabetical order of their names, thesponsors, and/or the rules. Additionally, a corresponding “Allow” boxmay be displayed next to each of the sponsorships. A selection of thisbox indicates that the corresponding sponsorship has been selected bythe subscriber. The window may also include an “Allow All” box that,when selected, indicates that all of the sponsorships have been selectedby the subscriber. This box may provide a quick way for the subscriberto select more than one sponsorship.

Turning to FIG. 6C, this figure illustrates an interface that thesubscriber can use to specify what information may be provided to thesponsors. For example, the subscriber may agree to providelocation-based information and address book information by selecting thecorresponding fields on the interface. Additionally, this interface mayallow the subscriber to select one or more sponsors that meet certaincriteria. For example, when the subscriber desires to receivelocation-based services, he or she can select the “Allow sponsors thatprovide location-based services” box, which in turn automatically signsup the subscriber to the sponsorships that are location-based (e.g., thesponsorships that include rules specifying that a function may besponsored based on the location of the subscriber device). Similarly,the user can select sponsorships that provide emergency-based services(e.g., the sponsorships that sponsor functions in emergency situations)by selecting the corresponding box on the interface.

The interfaces of FIGS. 6A-6B may work in conjunction. For example, whenthe subscriber selects a sponsorship using the interface of FIG. 6B andwhen the subscriber does not allow the sponsor to access his or herlocation information using the interface of FIG. 6C, if the sponsorshiprequires the location information, the exchange platform 522 may notenforce the sponsorship (e.g., charges incurred by the subscriber withregard to the sponsored function are charged to the subscriber ratherthan the sponsor). Further, the various available selections under theinterfaces may be set to a default state (e.g., none is checked or someare checked while others are not) or may be automatically set to a statebased on a related selection (e.g., when the subscriber selects asponsorship with a rule that requires location information under theinterface of FIG. 6B, the “Access to my location” feature under theinterface of FIG. 6C may be automatically checked).

Similar to the interfaces of FIGS. 6A-6C, various interfaces can beprovided to the sponsors for setting up the sponsorships. FIG. 7illustrates an example of such interfaces available to a sponsor fordefining various aspects of the sponsorships. As illustrated, thisinterface may include a search field in which the sponsor may type astring of characters that represent search criteria and are used by thesearch engine of the exchange platform 522 to return results (e.g., listof subscribers) that meet the search criteria. The interface may alsoinclude multiple tabbed windows that the sponsor can select. FIG. 7shows only the window corresponding to the “Subscribers” tab. However,similar windows (e.g., windows with similar layouts and functionalities)are also available under the tabs of “Group of Subscribers,” “ServiceProviders,” and “Location.”

For example, the window of the “Group of Subscriber” tab may list groupsof subscribers to whom the sponsor may render the sponsorshipsavailable. Each of the groups may represent, for example, anorganization within a company. Likewise, the window of the “ServiceProviders” tab may list the various service providers that the sponsormay want to offer sponsorships therethrough. This window can include alist of the service providers that use the exchange platform 522 and/ora list of the service providers with who the sponsor has accounts.Additionally, for each listed service provider, a list of itscorresponding subscribers may be displayed. As such, this window mayallow the sponsor to decide which service providers and to whichsubscribers of these service providers to offer the sponsorships. Thewindow of the “Location” tab may display information about thesubscribers based on their locations and may allow the sponsor to offersponsorships based on the locations (e.g., offer a connectivitysponsorship to subscribers in one city and content sponsorship tosubscribers in another city). Various location resolutions may be used.For example, this window may list the subscribers and/or serviceproviders within a city, a state, or a region of the country. Additionaltabs may also be defined in the interface of FIG. 6B. Any of thesewindows may further list the sponsorships that the sponsor has madeavailable and may allow the sponsor to define new sponsorships and/ormake updates or revisions thereto.

As shown under the window of the “Subscribers” tab, a number ofsponsorship-related and subscriber-related information may be displayed.For example, this window may display fields for allowing the sponsor todefine the various sponsorships (shown in FIG. 7 as a table on theright-hand side). For each sponsorship, the sponsor may enter a title(shown as sponsorship 1, sponsorship 2, . . . , sponsorship M) and adescription of the associated rule (shown as “pay for data,” “pay forvoice,” . . . , “pay only for visiting website”). Because variousparameters may be used for defining the sponsorships (e.g., the when,what, how, who, where, and other conditions as explained herein above),additional fields corresponding to each of the parameters may also bedisplayed in this window. Further, this window may list the subscribers(e.g., by alphabetical orders) who have opted in for sponsorships. Nextto each listed subscriber, there may be a field (shown as a radial boxin FIG. 7) that may be selected by the sponsor to indicate a desire tooffer sponsorships thereto. Also, there may be a “Sponsor All” fieldthat provides a quick way for the sponsor to offer sponsorships to allof the subscribers with a single selection. For each subscriber, thesponsor may select the sponsorship(s) that should be offered.

The interfaces of FIGS. 6A, 6B, 6C, and 7 are illustrative and oneskilled in the art will appreciate that various other features andlayouts for setting up and signing up to sponsorships may beimplemented. For example, the subscriber interfaces may be customizedbased on the subscriber and/or the subscription. The subscriberinterfaces may display the subscriber's name, an identifier of thesubscriber device(s), and account information such as various summariesof the account that may help the subscriber decide whether to sign upfor sponsorships and the types of sponsorships to sign up for (e.g.,available balance within the wallets, remaining amount of voice anddata, etc.). The subscriber interfaces may also display informationabout the sponsor and the use of information provided by the subscriberto the sponsors. For example, next to a displayed sponsor name, theremay be a short description identifying the sponsor (e.g., businessdomain, line of products, address, URL, etc.) and a link to a page thatdescribes how the sponsor may use the information of the subscriber.

An example procedure for applying a sponsorship to a sponsored functionof a subscriber device is described in FIG. 8. The procedures may beimplemented using, for example, components of the operating environments100 and 500 of FIGS. 1 and 5, respectively. In the interest of clarityof explanation, FIG. 8 is described with respect to a single sponsor, asingle subscriber, a single service provider, and a single sponsorship.However, the procedure could also be used in connection with a pluralityof sponsors, subscribers, service providers, and sponsorships.

Operation 810 illustrates the sponsor setting up a sponsorship. Thisoperation may include the sponsor accessing an account managed at theexchange platform 522 by way of the secure web portal 532 and using theinterface of FIG. 7 to define the various parameters of the sponsorship.This operation may also include other account-related activity, such asthe sponsor defining rules for charging the cost of the sponsorships towallets of the account.

Operation 820 illustrates the subscriber signing up for the sponsorship.This operation may include the subscriber accessing a subscriptionmanaged at the exchanged platform 522 by way of the subscriber portal512 and using the interfaces of FIG. 6A-6C to find and select thesponsorship and to agree to the subscriber-related information that maybe provided to the sponsor. This operation may also include othersubscription-related activity, such as the subscriber defining rules forcharging the cost of the functions to wallets of the subscriptions,policies controlling the functions, and the like.

Operation 830 illustrates the service provider defining additional rulesand policies that may control the application or the enforcement of thesponsorship. For example, under this operation, the service provider mayspecify that the sponsorship is to be applicable even when the units ofvalue in the wallets of the subscription are sufficient to cover thecost of the sponsored function.

Operation 840 illustrates the exchange platform 522 applying thesponsorship to the sponsored functions. This operation may includeenforcing the rules and policies specified by the sponsor, subscriber,and service provider to the sponsored functions. For example, when thesponsorships pays for voice calls and when the subscriber places a voicecall to an allowed contact, the cost of the voice call may be charged tothe sponsor instead of the subscriber.

Although sponsorships were described herein within the context ofpersonal electronic devices, subscribers, service providers, andsponsors, such sponsorships may also be utilized within other contexts.Further, each of the operations, processes, methods and algorithmsdescribed in the preceding sections may be embodied in, and fully orpartially automated by, code modules executed by one or more computersor computer processors. The code modules may be stored on any type ofnon-transitory computer-readable medium or computer storage device, suchas hard drives, solid state memory, optical disc and/or the like. Theprocesses and algorithms may be implemented partially or wholly inapplication-specific circuitry. The results of the disclosed processesand process steps may be stored, persistently or otherwise, in any typeof non-transitory computer storage such as, e.g., volatile ornon-volatile storage.

The various features and processes described above may be usedindependently of one another, or may be combined in various ways. Allpossible combinations and sub-combinations are intended to fall withinthe scope of this disclosure. In addition, certain method or processblocks may be omitted in some implementations. The methods and processesdescribed herein are also not limited to any particular sequence, andthe blocks or states relating thereto can be performed in othersequences that are appropriate. For example, described blocks or statesmay be performed in an order other than that specifically disclosed, ormultiple blocks or states may be combined in a single block or state.The example blocks or states may be performed in serial, in parallel, orin some other manner. Blocks or states may be added to or removed fromthe disclosed example embodiments. The example systems and componentsdescribed herein may be configured differently than described. Forexample, elements may be added to, removed from, or rearranged comparedto the disclosed example embodiments.

It should also be appreciated that the network topologies illustrated inthe figures have been greatly simplified and that many more networks andnetworking devices may be utilized to interconnect the various computingsystems disclosed herein. These network topologies and devices should beapparent to those skilled in the art.

Conditional language used herein, such as, among others, “can,” “could,”“might,” “may,” “e.g.,” and the like, unless specifically statedotherwise, or otherwise understood within the context as used, isgenerally intended to convey that certain embodiments include, whileother embodiments do not include, certain features, elements, and/orsteps. Thus, such conditional language is not generally intended toimply that features, elements and/or steps are in any way required forone or more embodiments or that one or more embodiments necessarilyinclude logic for deciding, with or without author input or prompting,whether these features, elements and/or steps are included or are to beperformed in any particular embodiment. The terms “comprising,”“including,” “having,” and the like are synonymous and are usedinclusively, in an open-ended fashion, and do not exclude additionalelements, features, acts, operations, and so forth. Also, the term “or”is used in its inclusive sense (and not in its exclusive sense) so thatwhen used, for example, to connect a list of elements, the term “or”means one, some, or all of the elements in the list.

While certain example embodiments have been described, these embodimentshave been presented by way of example only, and are not intended tolimit the scope of the inventions disclosed herein. Thus, nothing in theforegoing description is intended to imply that any particular feature,characteristic, step, module, or block is necessary or indispensable.Indeed, the novel methods and systems described herein may be embodiedin a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions,substitutions and changes in the form of the methods and systemsdescribed herein may be made without departing from the spirit of theinventions disclosed herein. The accompanying claims and theirequivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as wouldfall within the scope and spirit of certain of the inventions disclosedherein.

What is claimed:
 1. A method executable on a first computing deviceassociated with a sponsor for sponsoring a second computing deviceassociated with a subscriber to services of a service provider, theservice supporting a use of the second computing device over a networkof the service provider, the method comprising: sending, by the firstcomputing device to an exchange platform, a request to establish anaccount associated with the sponsor and managed by the service provider,the account comprising an identifier of the sponsor; sending, by thefirst computing device to the exchange platform, first informationindicative of a selection of a sponsorship, the first informationassociating the selected sponsorship with the account and comprising arule for applying the sponsorship to the second computing device, therule usable to determine in real time whether the services of theservice provider are allowed to be accessed by the second computingdevice based on the sponsorship, automatically applying the sponsorshipfor a specified period, without presentation of advertisements andnotifications to initiate the sponsorship by the second computingdevice, and based on one or more conditions, including a currentlocation of the second computing device, the services including aplurality of features that specify functionalities that the secondcomputing device can access in association with a core network andindependently of the core network; and receiving, by the first computingdevice from the exchange platform, second information indicative of anapplication of the sponsorship to the second computing device based atleast in part on the rule.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the secondinformation comprises a charge associated with a cost for executing afunction on the second computing device.
 3. The method of claim 2,wherein the charge is posted to the account.
 4. The method of claim 2,wherein the account comprises units of value, and wherein the charge isdeducted from the units of value.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein thesponsorship sponsors any or a combination of: a voice function, a datafunction, content that can be used by the second computing device, adata bandwidth available to the second computing device, a serviceupgrade associated with the execution of the function, a cost associatedwith obtaining the second computing device, or a cost associated withusing the second computing device.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein therule specifies at least a condition for applying the sponsorship to thesecond computing device.
 7. The method of claim 6, wherein the conditioncomprises any or a combination of: location-based condition, time-basedcondition, or a cost-based condition.
 8. The method of claim 1, whereinthe first information comprises any or a combination of: identifiers ofusers of computing devices that the sponsorship is made available to,identifiers of groups of the users of the computing devices, identifiersof service providers that facilitate uses of the computing devices, atime frame identifying when the sponsorship is available, a locationwithin which the sponsorship is available, costs that are covered by thesponsorship, and information required from the users to sign-up for thesponsorship.
 9. The method of claim 1, further comprising accessing theaccount to dynamically update the rule for applying the sponsorship. 10.The method of claim 1, further comprising receiving a notificationindicative of a selection of the sponsorship by the subscriber.
 11. Themethod of claim 1, further comprising allowing the sponsor to send analert to subscribers to the service provider, the alert comprising adescription of the sponsorship.
 12. The method of claim 1, furthercomprising accessing the account to receive information about a balancedue to the service provider and associated with the sponsorship, amarket penetration of the sponsorship, and subscribers that thesponsorship is available to.
 13. A system configured to defineinformation about a sponsorship that sponsors a computing device, thesystem comprising: a processor; a memory having stored thereoninstructions that, upon execution by the processor, cause the system toat least: generate data usable to render an interface operative to allowa sponsor to define the information about the sponsorship, theinformation comprising a type of the sponsorship and a rule for applyingthe sponsorship, wherein the system dynamically adjusts the ruleindependent of a use of a computing device; and send the information toa second system configured to support the use of the computing device,the computing device being associated with a user, the second systembeing associated with a network of a service provider, the second systembeing configured to support the use of the computing device based atleast in part on a subscription of the user to services of the serviceprovider, the information causing the second system to automaticallyapply, based at least in part on the rule, the sponsorship to the use ofthe computing device without presentation of advertisements andnotifications to initiate the sponsorship, wherein the sponsorship isapplied for a specified period and based on a current location of thecomputing device, and the subscription includes a plurality of featuresthat specify functionalities that the computing device can use inassociation with a core network and independently of the core network.14. The system of claim 13, wherein the rule specifies that thesponsorship covers a cost associated with the use of the computingdevice when the type of the sponsorship covers the use of the computingdevice.
 15. The system of claim 13, wherein the type of the sponsorshipcomprises any or a combination of: sponsored connectivity, sponsoredcontent, sponsored data bandwidth, sponsored service upgrade, or asponsored cost for obtaining the device.
 16. The system of claim 13,wherein the rule specifies any or a combination of: a time frame whenthe sponsorship is available, a cost covered by the sponsorship,information required from the second user, or a location within whichthe sponsorship is available.
 17. The system of claim 13, wherein therule specifies a condition for applying the sponsorship, wherein thecondition comprises any or a combination of: a demographic of the seconduser, a location of the computing device, a time restriction, or athreshold defined by the service provider.
 18. The system of claim 13,wherein the rule comprises a rule for deducting a cost associated withapplying the sponsorship from units of value associated with thesponsor.
 19. The system of claim 13, wherein the interface allows thesponsor to search for users subscribed to the service and to make thesponsorship available to a set of the users.
 20. The system of claim 13,wherein the instructions further comprise instructions that, uponexecution by the processor, cause the system to send an alert to thesecond user that the sponsor has defined the sponsorship and to receivean alert that the second user has selected the sponsorship.
 21. Anon-transitory computer readable storage medium comprising instructionsthat, upon execution on a first system configured to allow a sponsor togenerate a sponsorship associated a computing device, cause the firstsystem to perform operations comprising: associating one or more ruleswith the sponsorship, the one or more rules defined by the sponsor andspecifying an automatic application of the sponsorship to the computingdevice, the sponsorship covering a cost associated with a use of thecomputing device based at least in part on the automatic application;providing information indicative of the one or more rules to a secondsystem configured to at least initiate the sponsorship for a specifiedperiod, based on a current location of the computing device, andfacilitate the use of the computing device by a user withoutpresentation of advertisements and notifications and based on thesponsorship, wherein the first system dynamically adjusts the one ormore rules independently of the use of the computing device; andreceiving from the second system an indication of the use of thecomputing device, the indication comprising charging the cost associatedwith the use of the computing device to an account of the sponsor basedon the sponsorship, the use including a plurality of features thatspecify functionalities that the computing device can execute inassociation with a core network and independently of the core network.22. The computer readable storage medium of claim 21, wherein the use ofthe computing device comprises any or a combination of: voice function,a data function, accessing content, or obtaining the computing device.23. The computer readable storage medium of claim 21, wherein the one ormore rules are specified by the user.
 24. The computer readable storagemedium of claim 23, wherein the user is a sponsor, the computing deviceis associated with a subscriber subscribing to services provided by aservice provider, the second system being associated with the serviceprovider and comprising a network operated at least in part by theservice provider.
 25. The computer readable storage medium of claim 21,wherein the one or more rules specify one or more conditions forapplying the sponsorship to the computing device, the one or moreconditions including a combination of any of: identifiers of users ofcomputing devices that the sponsorship is made available to, identifiersof groups of the users of the computing devices, identifiers of serviceproviders that facilitate uses of the computing devices, a time frameidentifying when the sponsorship is available, costs that are covered bythe sponsorship, and information required from the users to sign-up forthe sponsorship.